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#1 |
Fanatic
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I recently came across a comparison chart on the Russian Onyx-Boox site listing the exact processor models on their current generation of eReaders. Looking their specs up on Wikipedia, I discovered that they were all 40nm. Given that Intel is up to 14nm, that surprised me, so I looked further.
Looking around on Wikipedia, I discovered that 28nm Cortex A9 CPUs are widely available, and from this 2012 article, that they've been around for at least 3 years, and "roughly 25-30% less power consumption" than the previous generation. How quick are the various e-Reader manufacturers (both the big players and the independents) to move to newer/more efficient CPUs, and specifically the current 28nm technology? Most of the specs I read don't give exact CPU models, so it's hard to tell. Given that battery life is a big selling point with eReaders, and weight (which is affected by battery size) is a reasonably important differentiating factor, I would have thought they'd be reasonably aggressive on this point. Are 28nm eReaders already out there (just not with Onyx-Boox)? Are they coming? |
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#2 |
Guru
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CPU hasmininal impact on ereader battery life, there is no need to put something state-of-the-art inside.
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#3 |
eBook Enthusiast
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What percentage of the battery power of an eInk reader do you think the CPU accounts for? I suspect it's pretty minimal - the screen is by far the greatest user of power. The CPU enters a very low-power "sleep" mode between page turns.
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#4 | |
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#5 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#6 |
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Sorry, I missed that. But if the CPU is such a small proportion of the power usage, then why are users of Android eReaders reporting substantially shorter battery lives (due to Android's heavier CPU usage)?
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#7 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Because on a general-purpose tablet the CPU doesn't go to sleep - it carries on running applications. On such a device, using a lower-power CPU could indeed noticeably increase battery life. On a device like a Kindle, though, I doubt it would.
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#8 |
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A better CPU would maybe improve battery life 2-3 hours, that is almost unnoticeable in an e-reader, they have a battery life of 30-40 hours with light on. But cost of the CPU would triple. Some of those CPUs cost more than a Kindle.
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#9 | |
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#10 |
Grand Sorcerer
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On a current dedicated e-reader, I think the four front-light LED's use most of the power.
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#11 |
No Comment
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I find it interesting that wifi is completely missing from this thread.
And it is probably the biggest power hog. |
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#12 |
eBook Enthusiast
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#13 |
Loving life
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On most devices the radios, and screens are the highest battery user. LCD screens use most of the battery in my Nexus 7, followed by the WIFI. So on my PW2 I keep it in airplane mode until I am through reading and I want to sync up my locations.
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#14 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
Last edited by j.p.s; 05-14-2015 at 11:04 AM. Reason: fix typo |
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#15 |
Scholar
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3 year old chips are way cheaper than yesterdays chips. And price means a lot these days for eReaders.
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